Call me crazy, but I do not get a thrill from losing money I’ve worked hard to earn.

Dear Dave,

How do you feel about gambling at a casino, as long as you limit your spending and don’t expect to win big money?

— Brian

Dear Brian,

I don’t really have a moral problem with it, but I don’t understand the concept. Call me crazy, but I do not get a thrill from losing money I’ve worked hard to earn. That’s not my idea of entertainment.

When people tell me they gamble for fun or recreation, my first thought is they’re delusional enough to believe that they’ll actually win — that they think they’re the exception to the rule. Otherwise, there would be no thrill. You may see a news story once in a while about someone winning big money in a casino, but that rarely happens. Think, too, about how much money those people had flushed down the toilet previously while gambling. There’s a really good chance they didn’t really “win” anything. In most cases, they probably just recouped a small portion of their previous, substantial losses.

My advice is don’t waste your time and money on that stuff. One way or another, the house always wins. That’s how they’re able to build those giant, billion-dollar places called casinos. Did you know that some of those companies are so big and expansive that they’re publicly traded entities? And guess what? The profits they make off people who are foolish enough to gamble their money away inside their fancy halls — and call that entertainment — drive their stock prices!

Think about it, Brian. Why do all the folks sitting at slot machines and card tables look like they can’t afford to lose money? Most of them look like sad, broken, lonely people. Maybe they change when they sit down. Maybe they were winners in life and with money before they walked through the doors, and their slumped body language and the look of stress and hopelessness they carry is just a coincidence or the indoor lighting. But I don’t think so.

— Dave

Dear Dave,

What happens to the money in an ESA if the child gets a scholarship and no longer needs the money?

— Jonathan

Dear Jonathan,

In an Educational Savings Account (ESA) and in a 529 Plan, you are allowed to pull out money tax-free in the amount of the scholarship. But very rarely do you find someone going to college completely free and clear. Often, tuition is covered, and even tuition and a dorm room in some cases, but zero-cost college is almost unheard of. There are always living expenses, books and other miscellaneous items, and you can use the money in an ESA for any education-related expenses.

The chances of your money getting trapped and you as parents winding up in a situation where you’ve actually saved too much and a child has leftover money — it just doesn't happen. This is a bunch of drama found only in the nightmares of nerds. Real human beings don’t have this problem, Jonathan, because nobody ever saves enough!

— Dave

Follow Dave on Twitter at DaveRamsey and on the web at daveramsey.com.

Popular Comments

Dave...I like gambling. It's fun. And I am not delusional enough to think
I'm doing it to win, although sometimes when you put five bucks in a
machine and come away a while later with four or five times that much, it's
hard to feel as
More..

11:38 a.m. March 5, 2014

Top comment

4601

Salt Lake City, UT

Gambling is when you don't know the outcome. The casino run a game where
the outcome is known. Las Vegas was not built on a gamble. As is said in LV, a
tourist weighs half as much as a bail of cotton and is twice as easy to pick.

5:51 p.m. March 6, 2014

Top comment

Ronnie W.

Layton, UT

@Hutterite

So in your words, one of the parts of the gambling is the
booze. It doesn't have to be evil or dangerous, but it can be. People get
addicted and lose life savings on gambling. They don't do that with
movies.
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Dave Ramsey is a personal money management expert, popular national radio personality and the author of three New York Times bestsellers "The Total Money Makeover," "Financial Peace Revisited" and "More Than Enough." In more ..